golddog goes for a ride
Inspired by chopstick's excellent thread, I'm going to try to keep one running as well.
Fair warning, though: I am neither as interesting nor as good a writer as chopstick.
Suggestions for a better title, are welcome. I was trying to think of a play on 'chasing the ball', which would be both golddog-ish and the ball representing the world, but I failed. Running around is something golddogs like to do too though.
I'll start a little bit with last week's trip to Costa Rica. I've traveled a fair amount over the past several years; if this becomes something people are interested in, I can try to recount some of these as well.
Heh. I walked quite a bit of Copacabana, being across the street. I will say that Brazilians don't suffer from being overly modest like a lot of Americans.
Unfortunately, the vast majority seem to be similar to Americans in body style. Lots of people wearing swimwear I didn't care to see them in. Not what I expected at all.
All measurements estimates:
- Miles flown: 12,928
- km on boat: 200
- km walked (nonurban): 10
- km walked (urban): 30
I'm sure I'll dribble out more info over the next while, ask I think of "oh yeah, I forgot to mention that." Overall, a good trip, with a couple of sideways bits that were stressful in the moment, but got through them.
Next adventure might be in April. My closest friend from high school and his mother moved from up north to N Central Arkansas. Haven't been to see the new place, and they're directly in the path of it, so a good opportunity.
Past that, kind of thinking about either India or Galapogos. Of course, I wasn't even considering Brazil five months ago, so who knows? Inviting advice and discussion.
The morning of the tour in Rio, I walked the beach beforehand, and noticed some people setting up a stand with a banner that said something like "Barracas das Colorados"
Asked Margarida what that was all about. It turns out that groups of fans are given a collective name, "Colorados" in the case of Internacional Football Clube. We decided that should be my club.
Unfortunately, could find no Internacional gear at the tourist shops. They're from the south of Brazil, so don't have much of a following in Rio.
I did go back to the stand on the last day in town to see if they had gear, but they just sold drinks. Bought a beer instead, explained why they're my club, we had a nice laugh about that.
I was surprised when going through customs and immigration in Houston that there weren't any forms any more. Seems like last time I was out of the country, they had little forms on the plane to fill out. Had to declare the T shirt I bought.
Since I have Global Entry, it was super simple: face up to a machine which grabbed my image, spend ~ 2 minutes in line then go to the officer who saw my image matched my passport and said, "thank you,".
Next, you have to grab and send your bag through security, as well as yourself. I assume that allows for people coming from places that don't adhere to the same high level of security (or aren't as paranoid, depending on your point of view, I guess). The latter doesn't have a TSA PreCheck, but it went pretty well nonetheless. Maybe 10 minutes, but it was ~5:40 AM and I was in zombie mode.
----------------
When I was prescribed malaria pills, the nurse warned me that this medicine may cause very vivid dreams. The bottle warns that it might cause dizziness. I feel kinda ripped off.
------------------
Got the text about dealing yesterday, replied that I wasn't sure, still pretty tired. I could've gotten a replacement, but after a nap, felt good enough. Went down there in the evening. About 20 minutes in, started sweating and feeling intestinal discomfort. Probably not strong enough to be called cramps, but unpleasant.
Got through the evening after a couple hours. By the time I got through, thought for sure it would be a doctor visit today. Took cold gelcaps to help sleep. Don't feel great today, but much less discomfort. Still quite tired, had a nap after lunch. Another day or two, I hope I'm back to normal-ish.
Or it could be the dysentery setting in. We'll see.
Oh yeah, if anyone wants to flip through the hundreds of photos taken, this should be a link to the album I created.
Maybe you guys can tell me what we're looking at in a lot of them. I imagine there's something in the tree.
As is my custom in the adventure years, I have a calendar of pictures from Brazil.
When I flipped to February, the picture is of the Christ the Redeemer statue. Which I'd seen in person three days prior. That was nice.
Trying to motivate myself to chase the eclipse in April, ordered a couple pair of eclipse glasses from Amazon. They came today, tried them out.
Full, bright sunny day. With them on, I can just make out the disk of the sun. I imagine they're good. I didn't expect them to be quite so dark. Couldn't see anything else except when looking right at the sun.
Of course, I only did that for a few seconds as a test. Now, I hope for clear weather somewhere pretty accessible in April.
Thanks, mark! Turns out, I went through Ennis on my gulf coast trip a couple years ago. 287 kind of skirted the town though, so I didn't really see it.
As mentioned, I have a friend who moved to N Central Arkansas last summer. That will be my primary target, it would be nice to see them and their new place. Their town is right under the path of totality.
Of course, it will be weather-dependent. I imagine somewhere in W/Central Texas is #2; pretty good chance of it being clear out there.
I’ve been thinking about scouting good locations to post up, but then realized my house actually gets 2.5 minutes of totality, so now I’m deciding whether an extra 2 minutes is worth ****ing with any potential crowds/traffic and driving an hour or so to get to the midpath
made my way to the path of totality in 2020
fifteen minutes away
well worth the effort
the reaction of wildlife is profound
I was talking to my friend's mom on her birthday earlier this week. She said they're expecting 100K people in this little mountain town.
That does not fill me with joy. Does make traveling out to BFE TX as appealing as that idea is ever going to be.
I have something that Saturday morning here in town, planning to bail afterward. Even if I don't make it all the way to whatever my target site ends up being, it should be ok, as the eclipse is late morning/early afternoon (depending on site of course). So, if I can get within ~4 hours Sunday, I should be ok to drive to the spot Monday morning.
--------------
One other story related to my trip. I had along a raincoat and a pair of nylon pants to resist water if necessary. After washing, I hung them up in the shower to drip dry, one on the showerhead, one on the water knob.
In an upset, I managed to take them out before turning on the shower the next morning.
I went to visit my uncle in Wyoming in 2020. It was great. I've been looking forward to this one ever since.
it really is worth any trouble to see it
Ran a test today to ensure that I remembered how to set up and attach my camera to the tripod, and attach and use the remote shutter release. Figure I'll want a longer exposure if I see the eclipse.
When taking the tripod out of the bag, saw that only two of the legs feet were on. Retrieved the other from the bag. When putting it on, noticed the little plastic ring that holds it on the leg was cracked.
Well, I've got a tube of super glue in the kitchen drawer. I'll drop some of that on there, and all will be good.
After prying apart the index and middle fingers on my left hand, I saw the glue I managed to get on the foot did not, in fact, repair the crack as I'd hoped.
Sigh. Went with electrical tape instead, it'll be fine.
I figure the glue residue will wear off my hand in a day or two.
Got any acetone lying around?
Nope. It's fine, residue seems gone now.
missed your chance to rob a bank and not leave fingerprints
maybe next time
Aha! Now I have a plan!
There's a chance I'll roll through Jesse James country on the (extended) way back from the eclipse, so that would be kinda appropriate.
good high school friend came from family owning red clay oklahoma caves with jesse james heiroglyphics carved into the walls
seen 'em with my own eyes but didn't think to make a crayon rubbing to prove it
Here's what the mountains looked like after the recent storm.
In the 60s and sunny today. I love living in Colorado.
land of perpetual john deutschendorf soundtrack
for good reason
So I did this today.
A disappointing outcome.
I decided to break up the long drive into two days, which put me at Paxton, NE (and Ole's Big Game Steakhouse for dinner, which I like. A pleasant day for a drive across Colorado and Nebraska. Stayed in middle Nebraska, then came over yesterday.
On the plus side, there's a Quaker Steak and Lube near my hotel, which I miss since the location near my house closed. Also went to the casino after checking in , and won a nice $115 at 1/3. Ran good, found a couple nice spots to bluff. Made one terrible call to cost me ~$40, but overall a good session for as little as I play.
Unfortunately, my friend that lives in Omaha got a work call that night and couldn't go for dinner, but I was able to connect with my friend who was my co-manager for the team at Drake, who also came in town for the games.
We went to both sessions, saw Duquesne upset the Mormons and Illinois take apart Morehead State in the afternoon. In the evening Iowa State dismantled South Dakota State, and then the Pups lost to Wazzoo.
ISU looked really good. Illinois too, probably a step below.
Neither Drake nor Washington State played particularly well. Very choppy game, they just had more at the end.
Sad dog. I'll start heading back tomorrow, before the snow starts, so that's good.
For something different, I decided to come back across I70 instead. Just out of Council Bluffs, went over 20,000 miles on the odometer.
Drove down to St. Joseph, then SW to Topeka. After seeing the state capitol
(Colorado's still better), picked up I70. Considered going to see the Drake women play CU in Manhattan when I went by. Decided I didn't want to watch both sides lose to PAC 12 teams, and I was tired, so I passed.
Stopped in the middle for a burger in Russell, KS, which was the boyhood home of both Bob Dole and Arlen Specter. Small city out on the Kansas plains produced two US Senators.
Just plowed across, got back to Denver just after dark. Supposed to be nice out today, maybe wash the Subie.
Next trip to see the eclipse in a couple weeks, weather permitting.
Other things from the trip:
1376.8 miles driven. Mileage ended up at 30. Strong headwind across the plains Wednesday really hurt that.
I'd forgotten how much religious content there is out there. iPod quit working a while back, so now I'm scanning the FM dial. Lots of Christian stations. Some Bible-thumping preachers, some religious music, but lots of stations. Next up, country, or course. Except for a small stretch across Colorado's plains yesterday evening, I could always find something to listen to. You know, "classic rock for the tri-state area" sorta thing.
Bad outcome and poor play by Drake. 6/14 from the line. Grrr. Quite a few simple physical/metal errors. However, as we were leaving the arena, I pointed out to Mark that, not that many years ago, Drake fans would've killed for any tournament bid. It's great to be competitive in the Valley again.
I kind of feel like this was their chance to make some noise. Their big guy, Brody, is out of eligibility. It seems like a big drop-off from him to the next guy in line. Should still have good guard play, all of them are back. Unless the portal comes through, not much of an inside game going forward, and I don't think the guard play is good enough to overcome that.
We did get to see some really good games, though. Only the Drake/WSU game was pretty clunky.
Driving across the plains, saw 4 Trump displays, and 1 Biden bumper sticker. Not sure what to make of those numbers, but there you are.
Good to see Mark again, spend a day and catch up.
Mark got us tickets for the first session, I got the second session passes. Oddly enough, independently, we bought the same seats.
Not sure who I'm with now. CU, I guess, they're kind of my hometown team. Cyclones looked quite good, possible final four type team. Tough road through Illinois and UConn though. I guess I'm second on them, know a lot of ISU people from my time back there.
Oh yes, one other thing: Omahans came out to the games. Lots of Creighton gear in the arena, even though they're in Pittsburgh and playing the same days.
I can see why the NCAA likes Omaha for a sub-regional: centrally located, lots of local support, kind of a bigger city, the arena's near a popular bar/restaurant scene in the Old Market, quite a few walkable hotels.